Appliance Park was chosen as the new home to build GE's newest product.

The high-tech top-load washers use 60 percent less water and have a higher capacity.

That has brought 150 new jobs to Louisville and supported 40 local and regional suppliers.

Cynthia Bennett, a GE factory line worker, helps manufacture the high-tech machine and understands new products mean more jobs.

“It feels better because you see more and more faces coming in, more and more jobs getting started up," Bennett said.

"A lot of job security. I mean, there's 150 people in this line that wouldn't have had a job in this part when they came to GE,” factory line worker Anitra Wiggins said.

Environmentally conscious machines are in demand.

"That's about 30 percent of the industry and it continues to grow. So those products are more efficient, have larger capacity, and that's what we see growing over the last year and expect to have a lot of growth in the future,” said product general manager Peter Pepe.

That has workers feeling more secure in a sometimes-insecure economy.

"Anything coming back to Louisville and coming back to Appliance Park, it means jobs for the city,” said factory line team leader Nathan Hall.

Although all 150 new jobs have already been filled, GE anticipates the market will grow and hopefully bring more jobs to the area.

GE said it plans to introduce a new line of front-load washers next year.

Hillary Clinton did not have a State Department email account while she served as America's top diplomat, a senior state department official said Monday, and instead used a personal email account during her four years on the job.